Introduction

The Sony Xperia E1 is a device for music lovers on a budget. A phone with a dedicated Walkman button and a rich music app, its music capabilities make it stand out in a fiercely competitive market of affordable Android smartphones. It also has time on its side, as it’s one of the first devices to ship with a new and faster Snapdragon 200 system chip. In addition to all this, the Xperia E1 is also a very compact and lightweight phone, a virtue that becomes less and less common nowadays.

There is a fly in the ointment, though - the phone only has a 3-megapixel camera with no flash. Is that a deal-breaker, and are there any other hidden caveats? Stay with us as we answer these questions right below.

In the box:

USB Cable

Wall Charger

In-ear headphones

User manual

Design

Forget about design intricacies - the Xperia E1 looks like a device sold in Dollar Tree with its extremely cheap feeling plastic. At the same time, though, it’s also compact, and lightweight.

The first thing you notice about the Sony Xperia E1 is that it’s built out of such low quality plastic that it makes the phone feel like a cheap toy from the Dollar Tree store. This very cheap feel is a bit of a shock even for an affordable device, as nowadays we have similarly low-priced devices like Nokia’s Lumia 52x series or the Moto G that push the envelope with sleeker look and wide color options. Despite its negligence for looks and build materials, it’s also true that the phone is fairly tightly put together and does not screak under pressure.

In terms of pure size, the Xperia E1 is a very compact and pocketable phone (it measures just 62.4mm, or 2.46 inches, wide). As such, it is nearly perfect for single-handed use, as your thumb can practically reach its every corner. In addition, the E1 is also of very light weight, tipping the scales at just 120g (4.23oz). And while in terms of thickness, it is a fairly chubby little phone with a body girth measure of 12mm (0.47”), its compressed overall size makes this less of an issue than it would have been for a larger phone.

Up front, you have just the Sony logo on top, the screen, and no physical buttons - instead, the device uses on-screen buttons for navigation around Android. All the physical keys are located on the left: a tiny lock key, and a volume rocker above it, and while both are clicky and responsive, they are made of that same extremely low-grade plastic, which is disappointing.

We ought to separately mention the unique Walkman key located on the top of the phone. Since the phone is so compact, it’s not hard to reach for it, and it’s also clicky enough. This key is specifically tailored to control the music listening and it integrates tightly with Sony’s Walkman music app. You can customize it to your liking, but by default, long pressing it starts the Walkman app, pushing it once pauses or resumes the current song, and double-pressing it switches to the next song. It’s a neat touch for music lovers, who can control their music without firing up the phone.

Display

The 4-inch WVGA display is of underwhelming quality, with washed out colors and poor viewing angles.

The Xperia E1 features a 4-inch display with a resolution of 480 x 800 pixels (WVGA). Quite frankly, the display is one of this phone’s weakest points - it looks very washed out, with a distinct bluish cast, poor contrast, and inaccurate colors. Viewing angles are just terrible (and we’re not being picky) - tilt the phone just slightly and you witness huge loss in contrast and color saturation. With all these serious flaws, the middling 480 x 800-pixel resolution, and the 233ppi pixel density, looks like a mild inconvenience that we could excuse given the cheap price of the phone.

On a more positive note, the phone supports automatic brightness adjustments, a setting that is often times missing on low-end devices. It’s also fairly bright, but outdoors its visibility is not great because of the high reflectivity of the display.

The CIE 1931 xy color gamut chart represents the set (area) of colors that a display can reproduce, with the sRGB colorspace (the highlighted triangle) serving as reference. The chart also provides a visual representation of a display's color accuracy. The small squares across the boundaries of the triangle are the reference points for the various colors, while the small dots are the actual measurements. Ideally, each dot should be positioned on top of its respective square. The 'x: CIE31' and 'y: CIE31' values in the table below the chart indicate the position of each measurement on the chart. 'Y' shows the luminance (in nits) of each measured color, while 'Target Y' is the desired luminance level for that color. Finally, 'ΔE 2000' is the Delta E value of the measured color. Delta E values of below 2 are ideal.

The Color accuracy chart gives an idea of how close a display's measured colors are to their referential values. The first line holds the measured (actual) colors, while the second line holds the reference (target) colors. The closer the actual colors are to the target ones, the better.

The Grayscale accuracy chart shows whether a display has a correct white balance (balance between red, green and blue) across different levels of grey (from dark to bright). The closer the Actual colors are to the Target ones, the better.

17 Comments

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Why sony displays suck. I tried a galaxy Y and a xperia E. Galaxy had a great screen for the price with good colors, contrast and above average viewing angles. The xperia was plain terrible. Many people complain sammy displays have poor pixel density compared to sony and others but in reality pixel density matters the least for average joes.

those that bear the "1" are apparently awful devices. there's the z1 with the sub par display and here's the e1. maybe they're not really supposed to exist. they just needed to sell away those stocks of displays they have.

I suggest SONY continue to iterate this line> A Sony E2 Music perhaps
I think its great if sony can create a phone with this specs:
- 4-4.3 inches
- 8 megapixel camera rear cam + 5 megapixels front facing one
-Decent processor
-1-2gbRam
-8Gb built in Storage
-A better body design(apply sonyz1 like design)
-Special music buttons
-Dust&water resistant
-a decent Battery
-and bonus LTE capability
and dont forget the special LED light.a small circle
one is enough or like the one on xperia M

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